Intervoice Day Report

Intervoice Day Report

Report author: John Wetherell Project Assistant, Hearing Voices Team Mind in Camden 7th WORLD HEARING VOICES CONGRESS 6th – 7th November 2015 Alcala de Henares, Madrid www.entrevoces.org PRE-CONFERENCE INTERVOICE MEETING, 5th November Chaired by Dirk Corstens 1. Intervoice Safety Agreement (Kellie Comans) 2. Updates from different countries 3. Lived experience testimonies 4. Human Rights (Olga Runciman & Martin Tellez) 5. Small groups discussion 6. New online forum (Marius Romme) 7. Hearing the Voice (Victoria Patten) 1.INTERVOICE SAFETY AGREEMENT An 'Intervoice Safety Agreement' has been created (by the Board) to act as a guide for Intervoice events and meetings. In August, eleven people met to discuss formalising a Hearing Voices Network across Australia. And the Safety Agreement was accepted as expressing the Australian network’s founding principles. Text of Intervoice Safety Agreement: As members of the Hearing Voices Movement, we are inspired by the way Hearing Voices Groups offer a safe space for people to share their experiences, beliefs and ideas in an atmosphere of mutual respect and understanding. These groups can, at their best, be special spaces where members accept a diversity of experiences, being curious about difference rather than defending a particular standpoint. The issues discussed at Intervoice do not exist in a bubble, separate from the world. They have deep personal, social, ethical and political significance and, as such, often involve passion and emotion. Many of us, whether we have experienced voices/visions or not, came to this movement because of a desire for change. Equally, many of us have experience of being unheard, excluded, belittled, invalidated, victimised, hurt and oppressed. The passion that drives this movement is amazing, but we also recognise the need for us to continually work together as a movement to ensure we create safe spaces that enable us to explore the issues that matter to us in a way that is respectful and validating. After reflecting on the values that underpin the movement, the Intervoice board are keen to encourage a similar atmosphere within any event or meeting that is held in our name. We feel it is important that the values we all hold so close to our heart are carried with us into all of our activities. To support this, we ask that people attending events hosted or supported by Intervoice (online or in person) … Keep warmth, compassion and empathy at the heart of our discussions. Ask questions, challenge ideas and remember that you have a voice as an individual within this movement. We are stronger because we are diverse. Listen to one another and respect the beliefs and experiences of us all Be curious about differences of opinion, rather than defending our own perspective. We encourage people to take responsibility and ownership for their actions and reactions, creating a safe and welcoming space for all. If at any time, someone doesn’t feel safe within our events, it is our collective responsibility to address any issues that contribute to this. Report author: John Wetherell Project Assistant, Hearing Voices Team Mind in Camden 2.UPDATES FROM DIFFERENT COUNTRIES Greece A (voice-hearing?) psychiatrist from Greece spoke briefly, about how voices are an expression of our feelings, and the predominant feeling in Greece at the moment is fear. One part of the reason for this is the financial crisis. He described the hearing voices movement in Greece as a core resistance of 30 people. There was a separate brief presentation later in the day, about the Syria/Afghanistan refugee crisis. Stats were quoted. One-third of people dying during the crossings to Greece from Turkey are children. The term concentration camps was used by the speaker to describe the special camps set up for dealing with the refugees, and the descriptor disgusting for the arbitrary distinctions being made between “refugee” and “migrant”. The speaker called for an INTERVOICE declaration to affirm that Europe needs the ‘voices’ of the Syrian refugees. The government is to re-open (for refugees) the notorious psychiatric institution on the island of Leros, closed in 1999 after a scandal about the conditions in which its inmates were held. The symbolism of this step is impossible to miss. Australia http://hvna.net.au & http://ozvoices.org The movement in Australia began with Ron & Karen Coleman visiting in 2005. The work was carried forward by Lyn Mahboub & Joe Calleja . At present the national movement is mainly a website, and state networks are proving easier to organise than a national one. Dirk joked that the Australians are ‘the best organisers in the world’. There are signs that the Australian universities are coming on board. Efforts are being made towards making the movement in Australia more voice-hearer-led. Malta www.hearingvoicesmalta.com The movement is extremely recent in Malta (August 2015) and is still at the stage where it feels very controversial, in an atmosphere where the medical model dominates. It began from an interest within the university, where Paulann Grech lectures in mental health. Her talks on HV have been well received. There is currently more interest from professionals than from voice-hearers, and still trying to recruit voice-hearer co-facilitators. Dirk pointed out both models work (professional facilitators and/or voice-hearer facilitators). Spain There was a meeting in 2013 with Dirk Corstens and Olga Runciman. Out of this start, some groups have resulted. [Language barrier made further notes difficult]. England http://www.hearing-voices.org/ The Hearing Voices Network in England dates from 1987. The board of HVN have been re-thinking their approach, coming to the conclusion that they themselves are very unimportant. The really important work is done on the ground by the groups themselves. There all kinds of different groups running — within psychiatric services; independent of psychiatric services; in prisons; hospitals; and for young people. Another outcome of the board’s deliberations was a decision not to fundraise, but instead to try to help people connect, by fostering links with other organisations. For the future, we are looking beyond voices, to apply the same ethos to other forms of distress that have been pathologised. Report author: John Wetherell Project Assistant, Hearing Voices Team Mind in Camden Western Balkans Hearing Voices Network http://nasglas.org Including Bosnia, Serbia, Slovenia & Croatia. Because of their recent history, they’re in a stage which can be described as post-traumatic, and needing alternatives to the medicalisation of trauma. The network’s beginnings were in 2012, with Will Hall delivering workshops on Voices & Trauma, followed by Rai Waddingham from Mind in Camden in 2013, & Hywel Davies and Dirk Corstens. Rai helped set up their website, Our Voice. They also used the resource from Icarus Project: Friends Make the Best Medicine.......and Paul Baker’s book The Voice Inside which has been translated by voice hearers into local languages. Dirk commented on the tension between personal and social processing, quoting Jacqui Dillon: “The personal is political”. Poland Trevor Eyles read out a letter from a psychiatrist (Renic?) in Poland. The first seed of interest was sown by a chance meeting between Trevor and Renic at the Congress in Thessaloniki in 2014 – and continued via an ISPS conference in New York earlier this year – culminating in a Hearing Voices Conference in Poland itself on 15th June 2015, at the University of Social Sciences and Humanities in Katowice. A further workshop was held last month (October). They have 2 more workshops planned, an interview with Trevor published on social media, a Polish version of the Maastricht Interview, and a Facebook group. There are active plans for a Hearing Voices Group, to be facilitated by voice-hearers. Canada Brigitte Soucy from Quebec spoke. There has been a Hearing Voices Group in Quebec since 2002, and a national Canadian Hearing Voices Network since 2005. There are now 22 groups in the network. Thanks were expressed to Ron Coleman, Paul Baker, Sandra Escher and Marius Romme for their help in the French translation of the book Living With Voices: 50 Stories of Recovery. USA www.hearingvoicesusa.org Lisa Forrester spoke, describing the USA as a late arrival to the Hearing Voices community. There’s been a working group since 2010, making organised efforts (in collaboration with Jacqui Dillon) to bring Hearing Voices to the USA. They’ve achieved a total so far of 72 groups. They’ve also benefited recently from a $350,00 donation to the Hearing Voices Fund held by the Foundation for Mental Health Excellence. The fund is administered by Jacqui Dillon and Gayle Hornstein and concentrates at present on providing training, but later phases will include research and evaluation. Lisa echoed Rai’s words from England about trying very hard to be small and insignificant because it’s not about the power of the organisation but about the power of the voice-hearers themselves. Lisa and her colleagues/peers hope to host the Congress in the USA in 2017. Netherlands Dutch website: Schizophrenia Doesn’t Exist. [Apologies, JW missed this update] 3.LIVED EXPERIENCE TESTIMONIES We heard from two different Spanish voice-hearers. The first lived experience testimony felt there was scope for a very broad interpretation of what we actually mean by ‘voices’. A dominant theme was his isolation during 15 years of medical treatment – treatment which he describes as an obstacle not a help. He spoke of his rising interest and Report author: John Wetherell Project Assistant, Hearing Voices Team Mind in Camden passionate reading around the areas of philosophy and psychology, and his growing political awareness and spirit of independence. Parallel to this process, his voices starting becoming much more positive, and then disappeared altogether, as the ‘voices’ of his friends and family began to take their place.

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